Hope everyone is enjoying the farmers market season!!! Jen
From: Sympa user
[mailto:sy...@elist.tufts.edu] On Behalf Of Arlin
Wasserman
Sent: Monday, July 23, 2007 11:57
AM
To: Arlin Wasserman;
com...@elist.tufts.edu
Subject: [COMFOOD:] Too many
markets or too few farmers?
Too many markets or too few farmers?
The city of Bloomington
is the latest to add a farmers market, and like many new sites, it's struggling
to find just the right balance of vendors to draw loyal customers.
By Mary Jane Smetanka,
Star Tribune
Last update: July 22, 2007 – 9:20 PM
http://www.startribune.com/462/story/1317731.html
Has the Twin Cities finally reached the saturation point for farmers markets?
The problem isn't that there aren't customers. Bloomington, the latest city to jump on the
market bandwagon, drew so many shoppers on its first Saturday earlier this
month that many vendors sold out by 8:30 a.m., just 90 minutes after the market
opened.
The issue is with vendors. Drawn by that first day's success, almost twice as
many sellers -- about 20 -- came the second Saturday. But after the morning
rush, it was the flower vendors, the jam guy and the bread seller who were
doing gangbuster business. Many farmers who were selling potatoes and zucchini
and cucumbers had a lot of produce left at the end of the morning.
"Last week was a good week; we sold out," said Chao Her of Brooklyn
Park, whose table was full of potatoes and cucumbers late in the morning.
"Today, it's different."
With about 45 farmers market sites operating each week in the Twin Cities area,
there are many places to buy peppers, lettuce and tomatoes. But for new,
unproven markets, it's difficult to draw specialty vendors who sell things such
as meat and cheese that help lure shoppers back week after week.
While Bloomington
had people selling candy, jams, coffee, flowers, smoothies and bread on its
second market day, it didn't have anyone selling meat or dairy, or even sweet
corn -- a crop that tends to come from larger growers who often skip new
markets until they're proven successes.
"We have the names of several meat people, but we haven't had a lot of
luck getting them," said Jim Urie, manager of Bloomington's Center for the Arts who is
supervising development of the market, which has space for 23 vendors.
"Some of them don't have refrigerator trucks, and the ones that do have a
full schedule."
Hard-to-get dealers
Among the meat dealers Bloomington
contacted were Jill and Jeff Marckel, who own Chase Brook Natural. They raise
cattle, hogs, chickens and lambs in Milaca and Princeton
and keep a dizzying schedule selling meat at 15 markets each week. Using two
freezer trucks, they sometimes hit three markets a day.
Jill Marckel said that, this year, at least five more markets came calling.
"I had to say no," she said. "Between the two of us, we do darn
well. But we're pretty close to capacity."
When Bob Leis of Bob's Bluebird Orchard in Webster was invited to join the Bloomington market, he
came the first weekend to check it out and was impressed to see goods
"flying off the shelf."
He was happy he came out to sell the next week. An hour before the market
closed, he'd sold all of his 250 doughnuts and had just 11 of 120 jars of jam
left. "I had a lot of people today say they were glad I was here,"
Leis said. He said he'll be back.
Sisters Chia and Youa Xiong had a near-empty table, too. Though they sold a few
vegetables -- something their family has done for 16 years at local markets --
their niche is bouquets. By 10:30 a.m., they'd sold 150 bunches of lilies and
other flowers. They called their dad, who delivered 50 more. Forty-five minutes
later, those were gone too.
"This is one of our better markets," Chia said.
Though they have other lives -- Chia is in college, and Youa is married and has
a full-time hospital job -- they like selling at markets so much that they help
their father out on weekends. Chia tries to catch customers' eyes by making
lily bouquets distinctive, and emphasizes their freshness. "They'll take
our bouquets home and see how they last, and they'll come back," she said.
Finding the right balance
Setting up a market is an art and a science, said Jack Gerten, manager of the
St. Paul Farmers Market. Shoppers want variety and an ample supply of goods as
well as a fun atmosphere, but they don't want a circus. Markets have to find a
balance for vendors, too, who need to sell enough to want to come back. That
can be a challenge if you want what's sold to be Minnesota-grown, as the St. Paul and Bloomington
markets do.
"There's only so much grown in Minnesota,"
Gerten said. "You're probably better off keeping the market small and
having a larger volume of choice."
Eventually, he said, an aging cadre of growers may force a drop in the number of
markets. But for now, he said, "I think there's room for quite a few
markets."
Bloomington is
still adjusting the mix in its market. Urie said he would like music every
Saturday. And he hopes to attract a berry vendor.
Toting a bulging bag of produce, shopper Myrt Kime cast a practiced eye on the
booths and pronounced it pretty good for a new market. She lives in Bloomington and had come
straight from the Richfield Farmers Market to check out the competition in her
hometown.
"The prices in Richfield
were the same, but I think the quality is better there. At least it looks
better." But she added, "I would come back here."
Mary Jane Smetanka •
612-673-7380 •
sme...@startribune.com
© 2007 Star Tribune. All rights reserved.
![]()
Arlin
S. Wasserman
Principal
2160 Goodrich Avenue
Saint Paul, MN 55105
USA
P: (651) 698-1991
F: (847) 574-0480
E: ar...@changingtastes.net
W: www.changingtastes.net